Occasionally, someone comes out with an "ooga booga" story or book about the Big One (earthquake) that is to come on the Cascadia Subduction Fault Zone.
I'm not saying that we shouldn't be
scared.
The Cascadia Subduction Zone had its last major slip and earthquake at 9 p.m. local time on January 26, 1700. How do we know this so precisely? I’m going to put it down to nosy scientists, God bless them.
When such a quake happens again, we
can expect coastal towns to be wiped out by tsunamis, along with destruction
caused by the quake itself, and tsunamis will spread up and down the West Coast
and across the Pacific Ocean.
It will affect the Salish Sea/Puget
Sound to a lesser degree, we hope. We'll feel it. A computer projection of tsunamis
caused by the Cascadia Zone Subduction Fault showed tsunami waves traveling up
the Sound, bouncing off of Tacoma, and rebounding to smack into the south
ends of Vashon and Maury Islands. Something to think about.
The March 2011 Tohoku Earthquake in
Japan was a subduction zone quake. Perhaps you remember the havoc and death
caused by that quake and ensuing tsunamis.
The 2004 Boxing Day Quake in
Sumatra wiped out many places and people in Indonesia and all along and within
the Indian Ocean.
The 1960 Chile/Valdivia Earthquake is
estimated to have been a 9.4 – 9.6 in magnitude, the largest recorded
earthquake in the 20th Century.
The second largest, the 1964 Alaska
Earthquake, was a magnitude 9.2. Most deaths were caused by the tsunamis created
in that quake.
These were all Great Quakes. I have
never experienced a Great Quake. I am not looking forward to it.
The 1994 Northridge Earthquake was
rated as a 6.7, but it caused a degree of death and destruction in the San
Fernando Valley and greater Los Angeles area that was unprecedented and led to
many changes in building codes and earthquake precautions.
It doesn’t have to be a Great Quake to
be a disaster.
Tectonic plate theory arose during the 1960s - before that there was a whole different geological narrative about how the earth moved and quaked.
The Cascadia Subduction Fault Zone is formed by the
Juan de Fuca tectonic plate sliding under the North American plate. Such a
little piece of tectonic plate causes so much havoc. There are earthquakes
along the fault zone frequently, but we don’t feel them here because they are
too far out at sea.
When subducted material gets deep
enough, it heats up and becomes magma, and produces the chains of volcanoes we
have on the West Coasts of the American continents, and around the Pacific Ring
of Fire.
I am reminded in my reading that Mt.
Rainier is an active volcano. Sigh. Noted.
I grew up in coastal Central California in the San Andreas Fault zone, where minor earthquakes are common, and I considered them kind of fun. Whee! We’re shaking!
That was before I was in the 6.6 Sylmar
Earthquake in Los Angeles in February 1971. It was centered on a fault out in
the Simi Valley - not the San Andreas Fault, which is supposed to unleash a Big
One, so I was told all my life. That 6.6 Richter Scale quake was plenty strong
enough for me - portions of freeways collapsed, gas and water mains broke, there
were fires, a brand new hospital in the San Fernando Valley pancaked and killed
around 40 people. Part of the Tehachapi Mountains was raised four feet.
Where I was, on a hilltop in
Silverlake near downtown LA, it felt like a truck was ramming the house
repeatedly. It was scary - I'd never been in an earthquake that big before. It
happened at 6 in the morning. I went upstairs and watched the TV news with my
landlady. It took a while for all the reporters and news agencies to wake up
and get organized. Reporters in the San Fernando Valley were reporting as they
ran out of their houses.
I went to work around 8, because this
is America, you know, and we don’t skip work for a major earthquake. I worked
for an insurance agency on Beverly Boulevard. On the way there I saw landslides
on hillside roads, and the building I worked in had cracks in the stairwell. I
know that because the elevator was out of service.
There were aftershocks all day, and
those continued for months. I got so I knew the Richter rating of each
aftershock by feel.
I have learned that that skill does
not travel. We had a 6.8 quake here on February 28, 2001, the Nisqually Ash
Wednesday Quake. It was centered near Olympia. I was working at a local
hardware store at the time, and I thought it was a 5-something quake. It was long, almost a minute the record says,
and it started, and paused, then started again and shook harder. There was
surprisingly little damage at the hardware store. We lost some glass lamp
chimneys and that was about it. People ran outside, of course, because that’s
what people do. You aren’t supposed to run outside. My father’s Uncle Ralph died
in an earthquake in Santa Barbara, California, in 1925, when he ran outside and
was buried in bricks falling from the building. This is why you are not
supposed to run outside.
This is also why I wouldn’t live in a
brick house.
But never mind – no bricks hit anyone
on Vashon, as far as I know. Some of the older brick buildings around the area
did suffer damage, and cars were damaged by falling bricks.
The original Richter Scale has been
upgraded for more accurate earthquake measurement, because it was originally
designed for earthquakes in Southern California. It was supposed to be an objective
measurement, but earthquakes are subjective experiences.
Let's just say that anything over a 6 is getting into major earthquake territory, and you will not enjoy it.
The 1906 San Francisco earthquake,
which had its epicenter in Tomales Bay, north of San Francisco, was
traditionally rated as an 8.3 on the Richter scale. In recent years it has been
downgraded to a 7.7-7.9 magnitude. A lot of the damage in San Francisco was
caused more by the fires after the quake than the quake itself, except, of
course, on fill land, which liquified when the quake hit.
I'm not trying to make it sound nicer
than it was by saying its numbers have been lowered. It was as bad as we have
heard.
The October 1989 Loma Prieta quake was rated a 6.9, and perhaps you are old enough to remember the damage that caused - a section of the Bay Bridge collapsed, and the double-decker Nimitz Freeway in Oakland pancaked, killing people in their cars. Lots of buildings in San Francisco that had been built on fill land collapsed or sank, and there was fire in the Marina District.
Santa Cruz and Watsonville were
devastated by the quake. Many buildings collapsed or had to be bulldozed and
both downtowns had to be rebuilt.
Again, the Loma Prieta Quake was not a
San Andreas Fault quake. It was generated by a lesser fault in the San Andreas
Zone. The epicenter was in the Nisene Marks Forest, east of Aptos.
So the 1971 San Fernando Quake (6.6)
and the 1989 Loma Prieta Quake (6.9) were big and did a lot of damage and
killed people. But they were not Great Quakes. Neither was the Big One.
The 2011 Japan Tohoku Quake was rated
a 9.0 to 9.1, the 2004 Aceh Banda Quake a 9.1, and the last Cascadia Subduction
Zone Quake in 1700 - well, there was no Richter Scale in 1700, but those were
all Great Quakes.
So, yes, there will be Big Ones, from
the Cascadia Subduction Zone and from the San Andreas Fault, and elsewhere, and
those quakes will be scary and destructive and deadly.
So someone occasionally says, “Yoo
hoo, big earthquake coming. Get prepared.” They are correct.
Big quakes are rare enough that we are
lulled into complacency. Be ready. Stock up on drinking water and foods that
don’t need to be cooked.
Have I done this preparation?
Oh, heck no. But writing this essay is
motivating me to do so. As my mother used to tell us, do as I say, not as I do.
Anecdotes:
In the 1971 Sylmar quake, Dr. Richter,
who devised the Richter Scale in 1934, and lived out in the vicinity of Cal
Tech in Pasadena, said that his dishes rattled.
In the 1906 San Francisco Quake,
springs dried up in Santa Cruz County. My father was born in 1912 and he heard
stories from the old timers in Watsonville.
Also in the 1906 Quake – Malvina Reynolds was born in 1900 and her family lived in the Mission District in San Francisco. She told me that the chimney collapsed in their building, and her baby brother, in his crib, disappeared down the hole. Major panic! They found him, sitting on his mattress on a pile of rubble, safe and sound. If he’d been able to talk, he might have said, “Again!”
2 comments:
I was present for the Nisqually Ash Wednesday quake in 2001. I worked for The Home Depot then. I commented numerous times that the last place I would want to be in an earthquake was in a HD. Yep, there I was. It scared me to my very soul. It didn't end there, I experienced a depression for over a month. I realized that I am as small as an ant on this planet, and can easily be swiped off. Such a false sense of security we live with.
Wow,it would be scary to be inside a Home Depot (or Lowe's, or Costco) or any of those big stores with product stacked up to the ceiling. Ikea. You are right about that humbling realization that the earth can squash us like that ant. That was what I took away from the 1971 Sylmar Quake. We are so accustomed to the ordinary and the usual. When the extraordinary and unusual comes along, it is scary as hell. Thanks for reading and commenting.
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